THE CHEMAWA AMERICAN 7
f "V V V V VF HJF V V a5-'J5fc V V "Ur
I LOCALS
Frank Delawar, Mrs Liphart's son,
and his wife and son, were visitors last
Sunday from Portland,
able and Cora Picard came from
St.. Paul, Ore., to attend school and
are well pleased with Chetnawa, ,
Archie and Guy Russie, Philip Purns,
George ' Scott, Gideon Hanbury, and
Edward Ainsworth returned from their,
vacation last week, , .
The following boys were admitted
last week; David Leno, Ralph and
Ernest Copeland, Frank and Law-"
rence Smith from Grande Ronde,
Oregon; Louis Hudson, Robert Dun
das, Gordon, Williams, Willie Bain,;
Willie Gibson and Jacob Scott from
Alaska; Elmer Plucker and Ray
Picard from Pendleton, Oregon.
.CUTTING TABLE CLIPPING.
It is with pleasure that the Tailor .
Shop extends a hearty welcome to our
funer tlojmate, Gideon Hanbury,
and we tmst that this boy will .grow
into what he promised as a small boy,
Ever since pchool opened there has been
a constant demand for school and uni
form suits and troupers to supply all the
runv pupils, and some of the old as well,
and consequently, we have been very
busy; a condition that 'we like very
much for one never can tell just what "
a boy is capable of until you push him
at bis work. And the tailor shop is
pleaped " io say that it contains some
pushers when it comes to business.
A visitr jo the Tailor Khop on Monday
morning would have found Alex Cajete
at the cutting table designing a draft
for a double breasted coat and vest and a
pair of peg top trousers (a la London
style) for himself, as he has authority
from the office in the form of an order
to do so. Well, we will wait and see, and
like the man from Missouri, ((we will
show you'' ) but space and time will not
permit us to tell all of it, so we will
close by inviting the American . reporter
to call again next week, '
The T Alton Shop.
.m i ; . .'h'. '
PECULIAR5 TREES V
The breadfruit tree of Ceylon is,
very remarkable. Its fruit V is baked,
and eaten as we eat bread and is' equal
ly good " and nutritious, In B&rbutu
South America, is a tree which, by pier
cing the trunk, produces milk, with
which the inhabitants feed their Chil
li t ii, .!. .. a "i .
ureu. iu tut? iutcnui uj Ainua, is a trw
which produces excellent butter. . It 're
sembles the American oak, and its fruit,
from which the butter is nrenared
is not unlike . olive,; Park, the
great traveler, declared that the butter
surpassed any made in England from
cow's milk, At Sierra Leone is the
cream fruit tree", the fruit of which is
quite agreeable in taste. '
At Table Bay, near the Cape of Good
Hope is a small tree the berries of which
make excellent candles. . It is also
found in the Azores. The vegetable
tallow tree also grows in Sumatra, in
Algeria an$ in China, In the island of
Chusan large quantities of oil and tal
low are extracted from its fruit, which
is gathered in Noveriiber or December,
when the tree1 has lost all its leaves,
The bark of a tree in China produces a
beautiful soap. Trees of the sapindus
or soap berry order also grow in the
north of Africa. They are amadngly
prolific, and their iruit contains about
88 per cent of coponin,